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Follow me through skies of Grey through murky marshland mire. Accompany me through forest labyrinths and fields of pale rye. Step carefully through old mine fields and feel my chest fall silent for momentarily my heart skips, caught by the long grass stalagmites. The imagination coils up horrifying imagery, a moment in time where warriors flee, outmanned and gunned down, the indigenous falls to his knees. Look up and seize my thoughts from falling into the past, for life is like a bike ride, and in order keep a grasp, head forward following an orbit and do not lose sight of the tunnels end for satellites which go off track crash, break, smash and bend. Sat in the grass staring up, you giggle and pull my legs, I trip on accord and hear the twang of an IED before crumpling like folded paper, onto a jagged boulder, feeling a pain in my head. I roll onto my back and face up to the battlefield where hungry farmers fend off intruders who gun them down again, blink and they’re shackled as the decorated men of war crack out cigars, sip from crystal and cackle. Scrunch these lids and rub my eyes the image raids from red to yellow crimson streams appear to mellow as your face above me, draws calm overhead, forget the cries of war-torn towns and villagers who bled to keep their crop in the forlorn era which saw many a soldier dead. A soul escapes and floats past your face we pause and marvel as it pirouettes smoothly, spiralling slowly into the fog and falling back down in the adjacent swamp. Trudge and trace footsteps west of the border As the scenery picks up, you nudge my ribs and point down the valley, towards the green and golden leaves of Burma where our journey ends.
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May 22, 2014
May 22, 2014 at 12:38 PM UTC
At War With Peace
Follow me through skies of Grey through murky marshland mire. Accompany me through forest labyrinths and fields of pale rye. Step carefully through old mine fields and feel my chest fall silent for momentarily my heart skips, caught by the long grass stalagmites. The imagination coils up horrifying imagery, a moment in time where warriors flee, outmanned and gunned down, the indigenous falls to his knees. Look up and seize my thoughts from falling into the past, for life is like a bike ride, and in order keep a grasp, head forward following an orbit and do not lose sight of the tunnels end for satellites which go off track crash, break, smash and bend. Sat in the grass staring up, you giggle and pull my legs, I trip on accord and hear the twang of an IED before crumpling like folded paper, onto a jagged boulder, feeling a pain in my head. I roll onto my back and face up to the battlefield where hungry farmers fend off intruders who gun them down again, blink and they’re shackled as the decorated men of war crack out cigars, sip from crystal and cackle. Scrunch these lids and rub my eyes the image raids from red to yellow crimson streams appear to mellow as your face above me, draws calm overhead, forget the cries of war-torn towns and villagers who bled to keep their crop in the forlorn era which saw many a soldier dead. A soul escapes and floats past your face we pause and marvel as it pirouettes smoothly, spiralling slowly into the fog and falling back down in the adjacent swamp. Trudge and trace footsteps west of the border As the scenery picks up, you nudge my ribs and point down the valley, towards the green and golden leaves of Burma where our journey ends.
'War brings peace by unifying societies' ~ James Morris (Paraphrased)
zacolian
Written by
May 22, 2014
May 22, 2014 at 12:38 PM UTC
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